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SimUAM: A Comprehensive Microsimulation Toolchain to Evaluate the Impact of Urban Air Mobility in Metropolitan AreasOver the past several years, Urban Air Mobility (UAM) has galvanized enthusiasm from investors and researchers, marrying expertise in aircraft design, transportation, logistics, artificial intelligence, battery chemistry, and broader policymaking. However, two significant questions remain unexplored: (1) What is the value of UAM in a region’s transportation network? and (2) How can UAM be effectively deployed to realize and maximize this value to all stakeholders, including riders and local economies? To adequately understand the value proposition of UAM for metropolitan areas, the authors develop a holistic multi-modal toolchain, SimUAM, to model and simulate UAM and its impacts on travel behavior. This toolchain has several components: (1) Microsimulation Analysis for Network Traffic Assignment (MANTA): A fast, high-fidelity regional-scale traffic microsimulator, (2) VertiSim: Agranular, discrete-event vertiport and pedestrian simulator, (3) Flexible Engine for Fast-time Evaluation of Flight Environments (Fe3): A high-fidelity, trajectory-based aerial microsimulation. SimUAM, rooted in granular, GPU-based microsimulation, models millions of trips and their movements in the street network and in the air, producing interpretable and actionable performance metrics for UAM designs and deployments. Once the ground-air interface is modeled, the authors find that the market for UAM decreases across all network designs relative to models with static assumptions about transfer times. However, significant improvements can be made to balance the demand and optimize the networks for transfer time, likely increasing the number of benefited trips. The modularity, extensibility, and speed of the platform will allow for rapid scenario planning and sensitivity analysis, effectively acting as a detailed performance assessment tool.
Document ID
20220006884
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Pavan Yedavalli
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
Emin Burak Onat
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
Xin Peng
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
Raja Sengupta
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
Paul Waddell
(University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, United States)
Vishwanath Bulusu
(Crown Consulting, Inc. Columbia, Maryland, United States)
Min Xue
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Date Acquired
May 3, 2022
Subject Category
Air Transportation And Safety
Meeting Information
Meeting: AIAA AVIATION Forum 2022
Location: Chicago, IL/virtual
Country: US
Start Date: June 27, 2022
End Date: July 1, 2022
Sponsors: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: 629660
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNA16BD14C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Technical Management
Keywords
urban air mobility
UAM
regional traffic simulation
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